Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:6.3.2.19 (
ubiquitin-protein ligase
)
799
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ubiquitin is involved in such fundamental cellular processes as cell cycle control, DNA repair, protein degradation and stress responses. We previously reported that cisplatin could inhibit the ubiquitin-
ATP
-dependent proteolysis and ubiquitination. We further investigated the effect of various antitumor agents on the ubiquitin system and found that aclarubicin (ACR) inhibits the ubiquitin-
ATP
-dependent proteolysis but not the ubiquitination process. We found that ACR as well as cisplatin inhibited the ubiquitin-
ATP
-dependent proteolytic activity of rabbit reticulocytes. The IC50 values of these agents were 52 and 90 microM, respectively. Although cisplatin inhibits the conjugation of ubiquitin to proteins through the inhibition of a
ubiquitin-activating enzyme
, ACR, at 120 microM, does not. Thus, the antitumor agents affecting the ubiquitin system could be classified into two groups; one is represented by cisplatin, which inhibits the ubiquitination of the proteins, and the other is ACR, which does not inhibit the ubiquitination but does inhibit the ubiquitin-
ATP
-dependent proteolysis. Mitomycin C belongs to the latter group.
...
PMID:Inhibition of different steps of the ubiquitin system by cisplatin and aclarubicin. 132 34
A simple method was developed for preparation of proteins conjugated with ubiquitin. Heat-denatured 125I-labeled lysozyme was highly ubiquitinated by incubation at pH 9.0 with a
ubiquitin-protein ligase
system consisting of E1, E2 and E3 that had been partially purified from rabbit reticulocytes by affinity chromatography with ubiquitin as a ligand. The resulting conjugates were separated from free lysozyme and other proteins by successive chromatographies on anion and cation ion-exchange resins. The ubiquitinated 125I-lysozymes recovered in the fraction not adsorbed to either resin served as an efficient substrate for
ATP
-dependent proteolysis in a reticulocyte lysate or with a purified 26 S protease complex. By the present method, 125I-lysozyme-Ub conjugates can be prepared in 3 h with a high yield of 15-20%.
...
PMID:Improved method for preparation of ubiquitin-ligated lysozyme as substrate of ATP-dependent proteolysis. 165 94
Selective degradation of cellular proteins serves to eliminate abnormal proteins and to mediate the turnover of certain short-lived proteins, many of which have regulatory functions. In eukaryotes a major pathway for selective protein degradation is
ATP
-dependent and is mediated by the ubiquitin system. This pathway involves substrate recognition by components of a
ubiquitin-protein ligase
system, covalent attachment of ubiquitin moieties to proteolytic substrates, and subsequent degradation of these conjugates by a multicatalytic protease complex. Recent genetic evidence suggests that the remarkable selectivity of this process is largely controlled at the level of substrate recognition by the ubiquitin ligase system. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes UBC1, UBC4 and UBC5 have been identified as key components of this highly conserved degradation pathway. Genetic analysis indicates that ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis is essential for cell viability and that UBC4 and UBC5 enzymes are essential components of the eukaryotic stress response.
...
PMID:Genetic analysis of ubiquitin-dependent protein degradation. 174 Jan 89
Nuclear oncoproteins are among the most rapidly degraded intracellular proteins. Previous work has implicated the ubiquitin-mediated proteolytic system in the turnover of short-lived intracellular proteins. In the present study, we have evaluated the potential role of the ubiquitin system in the degradation of the specific nuclear oncoproteins encoded by the N-myc, c-myc, c-fos, p53 and E1A genes. Each of these nuclear oncoproteins was synthesized in vitro by transcription of the appropriate cDNA and translation of the resulting mRNA in the presence of [35S]methionine. Degradation of labeled proteins was monitored in the ubiquitin cell-free system.
ATP
stimulated the degradation of all the proteins between 3- and 10-fold. The degradation was completely inhibited by neutralizing antibody directed against the
ubiquitin-activating enzyme
, E1, the first enzyme in the ubiquitin-mediated proteolytic cascade. Moreover, degradation in E1-depleted lysates could be restored in each case by the addition of affinity-purified E1. These data suggest that the ubiquitin system mediates the degradation of these oncoproteins in vitro. Degradation of other proteins, such as superoxide dismutase, cytochrome c, enolase, RNase A, and ornithine decarboxylase, is not mediated by the ubiquitin cell-free system. This suggests that the nuclear oncoproteins studied here possess specific signals that target them for rapid turnover by this proteolytic pathway. Furthermore, the relative sensitivity to degradation of various E1A mutants in vivo is also maintained in the cell-free system, suggesting that the ubiquitin pathway may play a role in the cellular degradation of these proteins as well.
...
PMID:Degradation of nuclear oncoproteins by the ubiquitin system in vitro. 184 34
All known functions of ubiquitin are mediated through its covalent attachment to other proteins. The post-translational formation of ubiquitin--protein conjugates is preceded by an
ATP
-requiring step in which the carboxyl terminus of ubiquitin is adenylated and subsequently joined, through a thiolester bond, to a cysteine residue in the
ubiquitin-activating enzyme
, also known as E1. We report the isolation and functional analysis of the gene (UBA1) for the
ubiquitin-activating enzyme
of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. UBA1 encodes a 114 kd protein whose amino acid sequence contains motifs characteristic of nucleotide-binding sites. Expression of catalytically active UBA1 protein in E. coli, which lacks the ubiquitin system, confirmed that the yeast UBA1 gene encodes a
ubiquitin-activating enzyme
. Deletion of the UBA1 gene is lethal, demonstrating that the formation of ubiquitin--protein conjugates is essential for cell viability.
...
PMID:UBA 1: an essential yeast gene encoding ubiquitin-activating enzyme. 198 85
The RAD6 gene from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes a ubiquitin carrier protein (E2) required for a variety of cellular processes including DNA repair, induced mutagenesis, and sporulation. Here we identify an E2 from a higher plant, wheat, that is similar to RAD6 with respect to both structure and in vitro substrate specificity. The protein was purified from wheat germ by a combination of ubiquitin covalent affinity chromatography and anion-exchange HPLC and has an apparent molecular mass of 23 kDa [referred to as E2(23 kDa)]. E2(23 kDa) was capable of binding ubiquitin by means of a thiol ester linkage in an
ATP
-dependent and
ubiquitin-activating enzyme
-dependent reaction. In the presence of a variety of target proteins, E2(23 kDa), like the RAD6 gene product, formed covalent ubiquitin-protein conjugates in vitro only with histones in a ubiquitin protein ligase-independent reaction. E2(23 kDa) recognized both core and linker histones with an apparent order of preference of H2A greater than or equal to H1 greater than H2B greater than H3 greater than H4. This E2 protein was approximately 17-fold more effective at conjugating ubiquitin to histones than three other purified wheat germ E2 proteins tested. Mouse anti-E2(23 kDa) antibodies were used to isolate E2(23 kDa) DNA sequences from a wheat cDNA expression library. Antibody-positive clones were confirmed by amino acid identity of the sequence deduced from the cDNA to the peptide sequence of an E2(23 kDa) tryptic fragment. Protein expressed in Escherichia coli by the E2(23 kDa) cDNA was capable of both thiol ester adduct formation and conjugation of ubiquitin to histones. Analysis of the E2(23 kDa) cDNA shows that it encodes a protein with considerable amino acid sequence similarity to the yeast RAD6 gene product. Similarities exist at the amino terminus, the region surrounding the putative ubiquitin binding site, and at the carboxyl terminus, which is unusually acidic. Based on both the structural and enzymatic similarities to the RAD6 gene product, E2(23 kDa) may represent the first DNA repair enzyme identified in higher plants.
...
PMID:A ubiquitin carrier protein from wheat germ is structurally and functionally similar to the yeast DNA repair enzyme encoded by RAD6. 255 33
Conjugation of ubiquitin to certain proteins can trigger their degradation in the in vitro reticulocyte system. In order to determine whether ubiquitin conjugation serves as an intermediate step in the turnover of cellular proteins in vivo, it is necessary to isolate proteolytic intermediates, i.e. ubiquitin-protein adducts of specific cellular proteins. While the steady-state level of conjugates of rapidly turning over proteins is relatively high, that of long-lived proteins is presumably extremely low, and therefore undetectable. Therefore, mutant cell lines with conditionally altered function(s) of the ubiquitin system can serve as powerful tools in studying the degradation of stable cellular proteins. We have characterized a temperature sensitive cell cycle arrest mutant cell (ts85) with a thermolabile
ubiquitin-activating enzyme
(E1; Finley, D., Ciechanover, A., and Varshavsky, A. (1984) Cell 37, 43-55). Following incubation at the restrictive temperature (39.5 degrees C), these cells fail to degrade short-lived proteins (Ciechanover, A., Finley, D., and Varshavsky, A. (1984) Cell 37, 57-66). However, involvement of the ubiquitin system in the turnover of long-lived proteins has not been addressed in these cells. A slow rate of inactivation of E1 in vivo, and significant rate of cell death following long incubation periods at the restrictive temperature, make this question difficult to address experimentally. In the present study we show that incubation of the cells for 1 h at 43 degrees C leads to rapid inactivation of ubiquitin conjugation in the intact mutant cell. Following heat treatment, the cells can be incubated at 39.5 degrees C for at least 6 h in order to study the possible involvement of the system in the turnover of long-lived cellular proteins. The viability of the cells is excellent at the end of the incubation. Following extraction, we have shown that inactivation occurs much more rapidly in the cell lysate in vitro than in the intact cell (t1/2 of 10 min compared to 4 h at 39.5 degrees C). The enzyme from both the mutant cell and the wild-type cell was purified to homogeneity. The molecular mass of the native enzyme from both cells is approximately 220 kDa with a subunit molecular mass of about 108 kDa. The structure of the enzyme is therefore very similar to that purified from rabbit reticulocytes. At the permissive temperature, the enzymes from both cells catalyze
ATP
-PPi and
ATP
-AMP exchange in similar kinetics. However, at the high temperature, the mutated enzyme is at least 7-fold less stable than the wild-type enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Purification, characterization, and rapid inactivation of thermolabile ubiquitin-activating enzyme from the mammalian cell cycle mutant ts85. 291 92
Ubiquitin, a 76 residue protein, occurs in eukaryotic cells either free or covalently joined via its carboxyl terminus to epsilon-amino groups of lysine residues in a wide variety of protein species. Previous work has shown that ubiquitin-protein conjugates are preferred substrates in vitro for a non-lysosomal
ATP
-dependent proteolytic pathway, suggesting that ubiquitin may function as a signal for attack by proteinases specific for ubiquitin-protein conjugates. One strategy to define the potential significance of the ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic pathway is to identify conditional mutants in the pathway. ts85 is a mouse derived cell-cycle mutant which has been shown to lose uH2A, a specific ubiquitin-histone H2A conjugate, at the nonpermissive temperature. We show that the loss of uH2A from ts85 cells is due to reduced ubiquitin-protein conjugation. We further show that the reduced conjugation is due to the specific thermolability of ubiquitin activating enzyme, E1, one of the three enzymic components of the
ubiquitin-protein ligase
system. We therefore proceeded to test whether the degradation of short-lived proteins is also temperature-sensitive in ts85 cells. Indeed, while more than 70% of the prelabeled abnormal (amino acid analog-containing) proteins or puromycyl peptides are degraded within 4 hours at the permissive temperature in the mutant (ts85), wild type (FM3A), and revertant (ts85R-MN3) cells, less than 15% of these proteins are degraded in ts85 cells at the nonpermissive temperature. In contrast, the rate of degradation of these proteins does not change significantly in either wild-type or revertant cells between permissive and nonpermissive temperatures. Degradation of normal short-lived proteins is also specifically temperature-sensitive in ts85 cells. Immunochemical analysis shows a strong and specific reduction in ubiquitin-protein conjugate levels in vivo at the nonpermissive temperature in ts85 cells. Taken together, our in vitro and in vivo findings with ts85 cells demonstrate that the degradation of the bulk of short-lived proteins in this higher eukaryotic cell is accomplished through a ubiquitin-mediated pathway.
...
PMID:Mammalian cell cycle mutant defective in intracellular protein degradation and ubiquitin-protein conjugation. 299 83
In rabbit reticulocytes, the hexokinase (EC 2.7.1.1)-specific activity is 4-5 times that of corresponding mature red cells. Immunoprecipitation of hexokinase by a polyclonal antibody made in vitro shows that this maturation-dependent hexokinase decay is not due to accumulation of inactive enzyme molecules but to degradation of hexokinase. A cell-free system derived from rabbit reticulocytes, but not mature erythrocytes, was found to catalyze the decay of hexokinae activity and the degradation of 125I-labeled enzyme. This degradation is
ATP
-dependent and requires both ubiquitin and a proteolytic fraction retained by DEAE-cellulose. Maximum
ATP
-dependent degradation was obtained at pH 7.5 in the presence of MgATP. MgGTP could replace MgATP with a relative stimulation of 0.90. 125I-Hexokinase incubated with reticulocyte extract in the presence of
ATP
forms high molecular weight aggregates that reach a steady-state concentration in 1 h, whereas the degradation of the enzyme is linear up to 8 h, suggesting that the formation of protein aggregates precedes enzyme catabolism. These aggregates are stable upon boiling in 2% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 3% mercaptoethanol and probably represent an intermediate step in the enzyme degradation with hexokinase and other proteins covalently conjugate to ubiquitin. That hexokinase could be conjugated to ubiquitin was shown by the formation of 125I-ubiquitin-hexokinase complexes in the presence of
ATP
and the enzymes of the
ubiquitin-protein ligase
system. Thus, the decay of hexokinase during reticulocyte maturation is
ATP
- and ubiquitin-dependent and suggests a new physiological role for the energy-dependent degradation system of reticulocytes.
...
PMID:Rabbit red blood cell hexokinase. Decay mechanism during reticulocyte maturation. 301 48
Enzyme activities that catalyzed the covalent attachment of ubiquitin to protein substrates (
ubiquitin-protein ligase
, UbL) were purified from the extracts of human red blood cells. These activities required the presence of
ubiquitin-activating enzyme
and
ATP
for activity. Four fractions (UbL A, B1, B2, and C) were resolved and showed different specificities toward added substrates [carboxymethylated bovine serum albumin (CM-BSA), G-actin, lysozyme, and alpha-lactalbumin]. The enzyme fractions gave different products with a given substrate. UbL A and UbL B1 were exclusively active with CM-BSA and alpha-lactalbumin, respectively. UbL B2 was most active toward CM-BSA with substantial activities to G-actin and alpha-lactalbumin and with no activity to lysozyme. UbL C showed significant activities with all four substrates, having a highest activity toward CM-BSA. There were many endogenous proteins present in the erythrocyte extract which were efficient substrates for ubiquitin conjugation. In particular, a pair of substrates were identified from erythrocyte extracts which were far more efficient substrates than the denatured proteins exogenously added.
...
PMID:Multiple forms of ubiquitin-protein ligase. Binding of activated ubiquitin to protein substrates. 301 98
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next >>